79 Md. 434 | Md. | 1894
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The two questions presented by this appeal arise on a bill filed for the construction of the third clause of the will of the late Thomas H. Hanson, of Baltimore City. Under this clause certain warehouse property was devised to Wilton Snowden in trust, to hold the same and collect the rents and income, and after paying all taxes, &c., to divide the net income thereof equally between “ The Little Sisters of the Poor,” “ The Vestry of Saint Mary’s Church,” Hampden, Baltimore County, and three other corporations not necessary now to mention. The trustee was authorized to sell the property so devised at any time within two years from the death of the testator, and to divide the net proceeds of such sale equally between the five corporations
In view of the worthy objects of the testator’s bounty, it is fortunate that no settled rule or principle of law will prevent us from giving full effect to the testator’s benevolent intention to aid these two corporations.
What we have said in Eutaw Place Baptist Church vs. Shiveley, et al., 67 Md., 494, and in Halsey, et al. vs. The Convention of the Prot. Epis’l Church, et al., 75 Md. 275,would seem to be conclusive as to the validity of the bequest to the Vestry. Indeed the case first cited would appear to be identical with this. There, the testator bequeathed! to the Eutaw Place Baptist Church a sum
In the other case we have cited, Halsey’s Case, where the devise was “ to the Convention of the Protestant Episcopal Church of the Diocese of Maryland to be held as a place for a Church school for boys,” the general principles in force in Maryland in regard to the jurisdiction of chancery, as applicable to the enforcement of trusts for charitable and religious purposes, were fully and clearly stated, and it was there held that the devise to the Convention was good. We are unable to see any substantial distinction between the cases we have mentioned and the one we are now considering. In each of them there is a corporation capable of taking, and the object and character of the trust are definite and certain. “When these exist” said the present Chief Judge of this 'Court in delivering the opinion in Halsey’s Case, and “when the gift is made to one capable of taking it, and when the trust is declared in definite terms, a Court of chancery has the same power to en
The case of the Church Extension of the M. E. Church, et al. vs. Smith, &c., 56 Md., 362, so much relied on by the appellants, has, we think, no application whatever to the case before us now, in Avhich, as in the Eutaw Place Baptist Church Case, supra, the bequest was to the church to be applied to a clear and well defined object,— in the one case to the Sunday School, and in the other to the parish school — both obviously within the sphere of the functions of the respective churches. In the Church Extension Case the bequests were declared void for want of certainty and definiteness in the objects to be benefited, which is not the case here.
The objection to the validity of the bequest to the “ Little Sisters of the Poor,” is, as we have seen, based upon entirely different grounds, and presents an important question — namely, whether the legal capacity of a corporation to take property in excess of the amount prescribed by its charter, can be raised collaterally by private persons, or in any other way, except in a direct proceeding by the State.
The corporation in question was formed in 1854 under the name of “ The Trustees of the Roman Catholic Asylum for Widows in the City of Baltimore.” Its name was subsequently changed to that of “The Little Sisters of the Poor,” and the provisions of its charter (section 1, chapter 199 of the Act of 1854) is that it may “ have, take and hold by purchase, gift and devise any estate and property not exceeding in the whole the sum of $50,000.” ■ Testimony was taken by both sides to show the actual value of the property held by this corporation, but we think it unnecessary to consider this question, for, conceding that the charter limits have been exceeded, it is not for the appellants to complain so long as the State;, which created the corporation, remains silent. The doctrine of ultra vires as applied to contracts generally, relied on by the
Adopting, therefore, the doctrine of the Supreme Court of the United States in Jones vs. Habersham, supra, we will affirm the order appealed from.
Order affirmed.